1 / 32

International securities regulation

International securities regulation. Sandy Jakab Kwantlen Polytechnic University – Poli-2150 States, Markets, Globalization: An Introduction to International Political Economy November 18, 2008. The BC Securities Commission. Government agency—funded by industry, not tax dollars

dotty
Télécharger la présentation

International securities regulation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. International securities regulation Sandy Jakab Kwantlen Polytechnic University – Poli-2150 States, Markets, Globalization: An Introduction to International Political Economy November 18, 2008

  2. The BC Securities Commission • Government agency—funded by industry, not tax dollars • We do three things • Set the rules for securities trading • Ensure compliance & take enforcement action when necessary • Educate investors and industry

  3. Enforcement • Cooperation with other regulators (national, international) • Cooperation with police … limits • Different purposes and results • Regulatory—to protect from future harm • Criminal—to punish for past misconduct

  4. The BCSC cannot … • Put criminals in jail • Approve investments • Insure investments • Give investment or legal advice • Undo a transaction

  5. The BCSC can … • Ban from trading • Impose monetary penalties • Disgorgement • Disciplined persons list • Red Alerts

  6. Contact us at …. • www.bcsc.bc.ca • www.investright.org

  7. What we’ll cover today • Content of securities regulation • Regulatory structures • International organizations and relationships • International cooperation in action

  8. Content of securities regulation • Protect investors and market integrity • We do that through • Disclosure • Adviser and fund manager registration • Structural oversight • General market conduct prohibitions

  9. Disclosure • Prospectus • Timely and regular disclosure • Abbreviated disclosure

  10. Dealers and portfolio managers • Proficiency • Financial viability • Character and ongoing business conduct

  11. Structural oversight • Exchanges • Alternative trading systems • Clearing houses • Self regulatory organizations • Investor protection funds

  12. General market conduct prohibitions • Manipulative and deceptive trading • Trading or tipping on inside information • Front running • Misrepresentation • Trading without registration • Distributing without a prospectus

  13. Securities regulatory tools • Rules and guidance • Industry education • Compliance examinations • Compliance action • Enforcement action • Investor education

  14. Regulatory structures - Canada • Provincial and territorial responsibility • Federal, too? • Direct government regulation (e.g. NWT) • Independent securities regulatory agencies (e.g. BC) • Financial services regulatory agencies (e.g. SK)

  15. Regulatory structures – Canada (cont’d) • Self regulatory organizations – IIROC, MFDA • Exchanges – TMX, TSX-V, CNQ • Trade associations - IIAC

  16. Regulatory structures – the U.S.A. • Federal regulators – SEC & CFTC • State regulators • Self regulatory organizations - FINRA

  17. Regulatory structures – the U.K. • Financial Services Agency (FSA) • Exchanges – e.g. LSE, LSE-AIM • E.U. Directives – UK signatory

  18. International organizations • IOSCO – International Organization of Securities Commissions • CESR – The Committee of European Securities Regulators • NASAA – North American Securities Administrators Association

  19. Tools for international regulation • MOUs (Memoranda of Understanding) • Information sharing rights & responsibilities • Process for conducting investigations • Evidence gathering rights & responsibilities

  20. What part do they play? • Consultants to G20 nations • Possibly stronger oversight of members

  21. International regulation in action • Enforcement - Rocky Mountain Gold case • Market policy - Temporary short-selling prohibitions • Intermediary policy – Mutual recognition projects (Australia and USA)

  22. Rocky Mountain Gold case • Rocky Mountain Gold – shell – Delaware • RMG Mining Inc – BC • Sole officer & director for both in BC

  23. Rocky Mountain Gold case (cont’d) • Delaware co sells shares to intermediary in Panama • Panama co uses boiler rooms in Spain • UK investors think they are buying shares in a British Columbia mining company • Victims share purhase $ to Ontario bank

  24. Chain of events • BCSC and OSC get anonymous tip from bank about unusual account activity • BCSC visits RMG office – say they are not raising capital but $2.4 million in account! • OSC starts work to freeze accounts – order & accounts frozen two days later • After that, no additional $ to accounts from investors

  25. Chain of events (cont’d) • Banking records showed European origins – eventually able to track 168 UK investors • Enlisted help of UK’s FSA – wrote to 168 investors & got 125 responses within 3 weeks • All purchased from 6 or 7 “dealers” – Spanish boiler room

  26. Rocky Mountain Gold lessons • Bring all international regulators together early – invaluable • Sort out differences between legal systems early • Use practical tools early • Think outside the box – here, cost of receiver to return $ prohibitive so OSC, BCSC, FSA did it themselves, with court oversight

  27. Short selling • Short selling = placing order to sell securities you have borrowed • Short sell when believe price will decrease • Improves price discovery & liquidity

  28. Temporary short selling prohibitions • Tied to vulnerability of financial institutions • Regulators feared excessive short selling could cause unnecessary volatility in price • SEC ordered no short selling in publicly traded financial institutions • Canadian regulators acted immediately to ensure issuers listed both in US and Canada were treated the same

  29. Temporary short selling prohibitions • Timing tied to first availability of bail-out money to US financial institutions • SEC tied its actions to those of European and Australian regulators • Order amended twice before expired • Twice, Canadian regulators followed immediately • Prevented “regulatory arbitrage”

  30. Mutual recognition projects • Established project = EU = operational • New projects = SEC initiated • SEC and ASIC have signed a MOU framework – not operational

  31. Regulatory change is in the air • Market stability regulator (s) • Clearing facilities for credit default swaps • Convergence (CFTC with SEC?) • Dawn of new age of international regulation

  32. Questions? Sandy Jakab (604) 899-6869 sjakab@bcsc.bc.ca

More Related